While trumpeting “pension reform,” the
New Jersey governor placed retiree assets in the hands of hedge fund
managers bankrolling his political career.
Lee Fang, March 18, 2014
Four months into his first term, Governor Chris Christie stood at the
podium of the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, and laid
out what was billed as the “Christie Reform Agenda.” To enthusiastic
applause, the New Jersey governor railed against what he described as an
out-of-control state public pension system. “Our benefits are too rich,
and our employees aren’t contributing enough, either,” he said. “We are
careening our way toward becoming Greece.”
Christie had just won his first statewide election with the help of
Paul Singer, the hedge fund manager who chairs the Manhattan Institute.
The month before Christie’s election victory in November 2009, Singer
had given $100,000 to the Republican Governors Association (RGA), which
aired a barrage of advertisements in Christie’s favor.
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